Ruex wrote:Why did I read this thread when I was hungry? dumb dumb idea.

and getting hungrier

also, where is LB with his recipe?

Here we go.

Sweet and Spicy Grilled Shrimp Skewers

Some notes. When it comes to seasoning, I don't use set measurements as I prefer to eyeball it. With seasonings I usually just try to get a decent coat on all shrimp then stir them around after every seasoning before applying the next one.

Ingredients/Things You Need:-Uncooked shrimp (can be frozen or fresh), stay away from the pre-cooked frozen ones.-Skewers-Crab Seasoning, can be spicy or mild-Garlic Powder-Cayenne Pepper-Onion Powder (optional doesn't add much I just like to use it)-Lemon Juice (fresh or bottled)-Butter-Hot Sauce-Black Pepper-Honey

1. Peel and devein the shrimps, wash them off, etc. I like to let them soak in warm water for a bit before I start. Place them in a large pot, something where you can stir them around easily.

2. Start seasoning with black pepper, crab seasoning, garlic powder, and onion powder. As I said, I tend to eyeball seasonings. Chances are if you go "this is too much" it is. It is always better to underseason than overseason. Just try to make sure each shrimp has a good amount on it.

3. Now comes the fun part. The Cayenne pepper. It has a very strong and hot taste so try to not add too much. If you add too much it'll overpower the honey too much and you'll just end up with very spicy shrimp. I always tend to underplay this one as you'll be adding hot sauce later anyway.

4. Now for the wet ingredients. A lot of this stuff (combined with the seasonings in the pot will make up your sauce). First pour a little bit of lemon juice on the shrimp.

5. Next add the butter. Depending on how many shrimp I have in the pot, I'll do 2 scoops for about 16ish shrimp and 3 for more than 20. All personal preference.

6. Stir, stir, stir just make sure all the ingredients are mixed together good. Next add the hot sauce, again it's better to be under than over with this.

7. Last is the most important ingredient, the honey. This is what I'd personally call the secret to the final flavor you're aiming for. I personally like to do a good amount just to help overpower the heat from the pepper and hot sauce.

Now you're done with the seasoning, just make sure everything is mixed together in the pot/pan. It'll look kind of bad but it all comes together once everything melts and cooks together, it comes out amazing.

Now there are two ways I cook it.

1. The Oven and2. The Grill.

I cooked it in the oven for a while, but recently got a small George Foreman type grill and it is 100 times better than the oven.

If you're doing the oven. Preheat around 350 while mixing the ingredients. Throw the pan in. After 3-4 minutes, take it out, stir it up again and throw it back in. You have to keep an eye on them at all times as shrimp overcook easily. You just want that orange and opaque white coloring. A good way to also tell when they're done is touching them with a utensil to make sure they're firm and not underdone. I try not to cook longer than 9 minutes personally. After at least 7 minutes I'd eat one to see if they're done.

Now the grill can be a bit messier in the setup.

8. Have two paper towels or whatever you want to sit the skewers on. Just pop the shrimp on the skewers, due to all the ingredients this gets very messy but I prefer to have them already seasoned before adding them on the skewers.

9. Have your grill preheated to whatever you like then just pop 1 or 2 skewers on.

10. My small grill cooks them in a little under 2 minutes so keep an eye on them. Just make sure you flip until both sides look done.

11. Enjoy. Very simple and easy recipe to do. My first time writing a recipe so apologizes if any instructions are confusing or hard to follow. Just season, skewer, pop em on, and enjoy.

If seasoned properly you should get a decent amount of spicyness combined with a very rewarding sweetness to balance it out. I'll post a picture next time I cook some.

combination hooka and coffee maker! also makes fries! will not break! will not...it broke ...

LB, that recipe sounds delic! ill def be giving it a shot when i can!

Brekkie:Tanks are like shitty DPS. And healers are like REALLY distracted DPSAmirya:Why yes, your penis is longer than his because you hit 30k dps in the first 10 seconds. But guess what? That raid boss has a dick bigger than your ego. Flex:I don't make mistakes. I execute carefully planned strategic group wipes.Levie:(in /g) It's weird, I have a collar and I dont know where I got it from, Worgen are kinky!Levie:Drunk Lev goes and does what he pleases just to annoy sober Lev.Sagara:You see, you need to *spread* the bun before you insert the hot dog.

combination hooka and coffee maker! also makes fries! will not break! will not...it broke ...

LB, that recipe sounds delic! ill def be giving it a shot when i can!

Tell me what you think if you do it. Oh two more points for if you're grilling.

1. The honey should create a great caramlization effect on the shrimp which adds a lot to the look.

2. Since you're taking the shrimp out of the mixture when grilling, you could melt down the rest of the ingredients in the oven to make a sauce to cover the shrimp in. They'll already be cooking in the marinade though.

Cayenne peppers come in between 30,000 and 190,000 scoville units. For reference, tabasco sauce tops out at around 5000, and most whole jalapenos are in the neighborhood of 3000 to 8000. So if you'd normally use a teaspoon of tabasco, switch that to 1/6th of a teaspoon of cayenne pepper. It's that hot, and drying it concentrates the capsaicin, making it even hotter.

LB, have you tried making your own seasoning mix instead of using "crab seasoning"? I season my crab (not to mention most other seafoods) with this mix:

Try that, and play around with the ratios until you get something you like. I find that most of the off the shelf seasoning mixes don't come near the taste that I can make on my own using my spice cupboard.

And for reference, this (clicky) is what I use when I want to julienne something. If it's bigger than a carrot, say a potato or something, I whip out my mandolin (clicky). Granted, I don't julienne very often - if it's an ingredient in something else, I don't mind settling for running it over a box grater, and if it's a garnish then it's likely a leafy herb like basil or something else that you'd want to chiffonade instead.

- I'm not Jesus, but I can turn water into Kool-Aid.- A Sergeant in motion outranks an officer who doesn't know what the hell is going on.- A demolitions specialist at a flat run outranks everybody.

Not to be nick picky, but 'hot' in terms of peppers is a very relative term. I don't find Cayenne Pepper to be that bad tbh. I recently just found a 7.1 million scoville extract. I know it's not a pepper, but damned if it wasn't tasty.

Gracerath wrote:That "stew flavor" isn't really a flavor at all if you ask me but more of an unctuousness, that lips smacking goodness we know and love from things such as good bbq ribs. That does indeed take time and controlled heat to break the connective tissues down into collagen. It actually doesn't take that long to do though and an hour or two simmering should do the trick with smaller pieces of meat. Your stew will be "done" in 2-3 hours and cooking it longer wont really do much for the flavor/texture. It is a convenience thing though. You can start it early in the day and basically let it simmer all day with no ill effects until everyone is ready for dinner.

Oh shit, I missed this post somehow.

Stews definitely have a distinct flavor that comes from long cook times. But that flavor takes forever to develop and tends to overwhelm the individual ingredients. It's complex - that's why I call it "stew flavored". A regular dish is to stew as a string quartet is to symphony orchestras. Everything in the stew should meld with everything else.

And collagen breaks down into gelatin when cooked - collagen IS a connective tissue.

As far as cook time goes, it depends on the meat you use for the stew. I know of one stew that's amazingly brilliant and delicious that's based around short ribs. Those are RIDICULOUSLY tough, and require a good braising to break down the collagen, then chilling to set the gelatin enough that the meat won't dissolve into the gravy of the stew, but remain in distinct chunks. Mutton is another meat notorious for requiring long cook times to tenderize, as are most game meats (venison shoulder is amazing in a stew, but requires not only a long cook time but also a long, looooooooong prep time - 24-36 hours of brine to take away the "gamey" taste before you can braise it for another 4 hours and chill it overnight to set it). Flank and skirt steaks (or the tenderloin, but who the hell stews tenderloin?) don't hold up well to long cook times, so those are mostly suitable for "quick" stews that are finished in 2 hours or so, whereas a brisket or short rib stew absolutely requires a long, slow cook time. As a general rule of thumb, if it's game meat or close to hoof or horn on a farmed animal, it needs a long cook time. If it's far away from the hoof and horn, it won't stand up to a long cook time.

Stewing is a lost art form, which is a shame.

- I'm not Jesus, but I can turn water into Kool-Aid.- A Sergeant in motion outranks an officer who doesn't know what the hell is going on.- A demolitions specialist at a flat run outranks everybody.

Get yourself one of those large 7-bone roasts - it's basically a slab of meat and bone sawed off the shoulder.

Season with salt and pepper, and put it in an electric skillet on high to brown both sides, then reduce heat to low (2 or 3 on a scale of 10). Add water about halfway up the meat, and brown gravy mix (3 packets for a good-sized roast). Cover with vents open and cook low for several hours (top up water as necesary!).

About an hour and a half before you want to eat, add coarse-chopped carrots and potatoes. It's a long cook time for the veggies, but they lend their essence to the sauce and borrow flavour from the sauce for a synergystic effect.

While the cooking time is long, it's quite low-maintenance, and the end product is delicious.

Sautee diced potatoes until they begin to brown. Season liberally with salt and pepper. Add chopped onion and cook until onion is translucent. Add chopped bacon and continue to cook until onions brown and begin to caramelise.

Fivelives wrote:Cayenne peppers come in between 30,000 and 190,000 scoville units. For reference, tabasco sauce tops out at around 5000, and most whole jalapenos are in the neighborhood of 3000 to 8000. So if you'd normally use a teaspoon of tabasco, switch that to 1/6th of a teaspoon of cayenne pepper. It's that hot, and drying it concentrates the capsaicin, making it even hotter.

LB, have you tried making your own seasoning mix instead of using "crab seasoning"? I season my crab (not to mention most other seafoods) with this mix:

Try that, and play around with the ratios until you get something you like. I find that most of the off the shelf seasoning mixes don't come near the taste that I can make on my own using my spice cupboard.

And for reference, this (clicky) is what I use when I want to julienne something. If it's bigger than a carrot, say a potato or something, I whip out my mandolin (clicky). Granted, I don't julienne very often - if it's an ingredient in something else, I don't mind settling for running it over a box grater, and if it's a garnish then it's likely a leafy herb like basil or something else that you'd want to chiffonade instead.

I've never tried making my own seasoning but I'll give it a go.

I use crab seasoning in a lot of shellfish cooking, just because it fits with shellfish food.

Heat 2oz (by volume) of cooking oil until it shimmers.Slowly whisk in 2oz (by weight - this is important!) of all-purpose flour.Once that's incorporated into a slurry, for gravies served with beef, add 1 cup beef stock; for gravies served with chicken, add 1 cup chicken stock; etc.

For brown gravy, heat 6oz (volume) of oil until it shimmers, then slowly whisk in 6oz (by weight) of all-purpose flour. Continue stirring until it reaches the desired consistency, and add salt & pepper to taste.

The magic of starch. Once you learn the magic of roux, you'll never have a crappy gravy again. It also applies to several sauces. You'll experience the best macaroni and cheese of your life with the above skills! (with adjusted ingredients of course. Don't add beef stock to your macaroni )

Nah, for macaroni & cheese, you use a simple roux of flour and butter.

I go with cooking oil mostly because it's a bit better for you than butter. The difference in taste is pretty much indistinguishable, at least to me. A roux, when used as a thickening agent, is pretty tasteless. It's only if you use it as a flavorant that you get any taste of it.

In general, the darker the roux, the less it'll thicken things and the more flavor it adds. A white roux is flavorless and a powerhouse thickener, and a brown roux has a rich nutty flavor, but doesn't thicken liquids worth shit.

- I'm not Jesus, but I can turn water into Kool-Aid.- A Sergeant in motion outranks an officer who doesn't know what the hell is going on.- A demolitions specialist at a flat run outranks everybody.

Place the steaks one at a time between two sheets of clear plastic wrap and pound with a meat hammer (preferably) or anything else with a flat surface until they're between 1/8th and 1/16th inches thick. Basically, pound them until just before they start to turn to mush and separate, then trim them to rectangular shapes and refrigerate while you're working the rest of the ingredients up.

Julienne the prepared artichoke leaves and shallow fry them in a medium saucepan until they're crispy, then set aside to drain. If you have problems getting the veggie itself to crisp, lightly dredge the juliennes in flour before frying them

Saute the asparagus until tender, adding the minced garlic near the end so it doesn't burn.

In a small workbowl, combine the feta, basil, and tomato and toss until thoroughly mixed together.

Now it's time to assemble:

Lay out the steaks, season with salt and pepper, then lightly dress with extra virgin olive oil. Lay about 3 spears of asparagus along one of the long sides of the rectangle, but not completely up against it - you want some room to play with there. Sprinkle with crispy artichoke and top with the tomato basil feta and roll it into a roulade (like a Ho-Ho or sushi roll). Tie it with twine, brush it with oil and lightly brown it - just until the meat stiffens up a bit so it doesn't fall apart, and you get some caramelization on it. It shouldn't take more than a minute or so if you drop it into a hot enough pan.

Remove it from the pan and let it rest for 10 minutes before slicing it. After it's rested, slice it into medallions about an inch thick and serve on top of creamy polenta - garnish with some basil chiffonade and more of the tomato basil feta cheese.

I followed a recipe for some Indian food a week ago and I gotta say, while it tasted pretty good, it smelled awful while it was cooking. It was a bitch trying to find garam masala and I didn't want to buy a massive amount of spices to mix my own.

I know it's considered "girly" but seriously Pinterest is the shit for organizing and finding recipes. I may at least 2-3 new recipes per week because of that site and then I can actually find them again, which is a miracle. it also allows me to save most of the recipes I find in magazines and then throw the damn magazine away after reading it. So much less clutter.